Credit: HIDDEN FIGURES Found them!

HIDDEN FIGURES Found them!

HIDDEN FIGURES Found them!

BEFORE HIDDEN FIGURES, I had no idea three black women were integral to the success of America’s space program. That’s not the only surprise here: Even the film’s title has a double meaning, referring to both the unheralded women who helped us catch up in the space race, and the calculations that were missing before their contributions.

Spending much of its runtime dealing with issues that persist today—segregation, racism and sexism in the workplace—Hidden Figures focuses on the black women who had to balance being tenacious and docile in order to get ahead, even as they were underestimated and undervalued every step of the way. To a soundtrack that’s jazz- and soul-inspired—with songs written and produced by Pharrell Williams—we meet Mary Jackson (Janelle Monáe), the first African American female engineer at NASA. (Who knew Monáe could act!? Well, anyone who saw Moonlight, for starters—go see it!) While Monáe’s a never-failing source of comic relief, Octavia Spencer plays the super-sharp Dorothy Vaughan, who brought to NASA leadership and knowledge of mechanics and computing. And Taraji P. Henson gives a stunning portrayal of Katherine Johnson, who calculated flight trajectories, launch windows, and backup return paths for early NASA missions.

Henson’s best scene is when she returns from her daily trek to the colored women’s bathroom in a distant building—since there isn’t one in her office—and finds herself having to answer to her boss, Al Harrison (Kevin Costner) as to where she goes for 45 minutes every day. Frustrated, breathless, and rightfully irritated, Johnson manages to stay poised while explaining why something as trivial as relieving herself is such an ordeal in a segregated world. Cue Harrison’s big, heroic “I don’t see color!” moment: He finally bosses up and marches across campus with a hammer to bust through a symbolically heavy “colored ladies bathroom” sign. He declares that no longer shall they segregate the toilets at NASA, because “everyone pees the same color.” I rolled my eyes. It’s one of the few times Hidden Figures comes off as self-congratulatory: Not all whites back then were racist! Look at Kevin Costner! We eventually ended segregation!

Jenni Moore is a former music editor and hip-hop columnist and current freelancer at The Portland Mercury. She also writes about comedy, cannabis, movies, TV, and her hatred of taxidermy.